Australia is deadly serious about killing millions of cats

The Australian government embarked on a project to cut down its massive feral cat population using poisonous sausage after the cats decimated an estimated 20-plus species.
The sausages contain a mix of chicken fat, kangaroo meat, herbs and spices along with deadly poison, The New York Times reported Thursday. Dr. Dave Algar, also known as Dr. Death, studied brands of cat food to determine what flavors were most appealing to felines. Algar, a principal research scientist in the Department of Biodiversity Conservation and Attractions for the state of Western Australia, created a recipe for the sausages laced with 1080, a highly lethal poison to cats, TheNYT reported.
The deadly sausages are the latest in the country’s attempt to exterminate the millions of feral cats that roam throughout Australia. The cats could be occupying nearly 99.8 percent of the country, according to TheNYT, citing conservationists’ estimates. They reach nearly 100 in number per square kilometer in some areas. Experts do not know how the cats, which are not indigenous to Australia, first arrived.
The feral cats have led directly to the extinction of at least 22 of Australia’s species, researchers estimate.
“Recent extinction rates in Australia are unparalleled,” conservation researcher John Woinarski told TheNYT. “It’s calamitous.”
Australia pledged in 2015 to kill at least 2 million feral cats by 2020 in order to preserve indigenous wildlife. The cats threaten dozens of small rodent and marsupial species. Eradication methods included shooting, trapping and poison.
Despite reservations, PETA Australia acknowledged the cats’ hunting had decimated and continues to destroy species and habitats, TheNYT reported.
Petitions to save the cats were met largely with scorn by most Australians.
“Why has someone started a petition to save the feral cats? Pure stupidity as more and more native animals are killed by cats,” a reader told a newspaper editor in Queensland.
Feral cats have become a plague around the world, and have been responsible for the extinction of roughly 63 unique species in the past five centuries, according to an analysis in “Proceedings of the National Academies of Sciences.”
Source: Daily Caller

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